Thursday, January 29, 2015

Young boys as Sexual Objects in Persian Art

In
Islamic culture for over 1000 years we see a fascinating acceptance of Homosexual
Child Molestation while at the same time condemning Homosexuality.

We see
this dichotomy in the acceptance of Amradhā (young,
beardless boys) as sexual
objects and sexual partners for mature men. Amradhā or Bacha bazi
as they are also called are considered appropriate sexual partners up until
they grow a beard with certain limitations.

Two key distinctions are drawn. Liwāṭ i.e pederasty
is acceptable as long as the man uses the boy for anal or oral sex. What is forbidden
and seen as shameful is for men is Ubna that is to receive a man in ones anus
or mouth. The line of demarcation is the onset of the beard. The ubna male or mokhannas
is condemned as a passive homosexual worthy of death.

We see this in the great Persian poem Gulistan (The
Rose Garden). Sa’di of Shiraz (1213

-1295 AD) wrote:

Tatari ke koshad mokhannas rā

Tatari ra degar nabāyad kosht

A Mongol who kills a mokhannas

Is a Tatar who should not be killed.

To put a point on it Sa’di was writing during the
onslaught and early occupation of the Mongols who ravaged Persia. Yet he sees a
submissive homosexual as of so little consequence as to be worthy of death by
the hated oppressors.

Then of course we see some who take a somewhat
softer line such as we see in Jalāl ad-Din Rumi (Mawlana) (1207-1273 AD) who wrote in his great poem Masnavi-e ma’navi

Keng raft kudaki rāyāft khord

Zard shod kudak ze bim-e qasd-e mard

Goft: iman bāsh, ey zibā-ye man

Ke to khāhi bovad dar bālā-ye man!

Man agar houlam mokhannas dān marā

Hamchu oshtor barneshin mirān marā

A man had found a little boy.

The boy paled with fear, afraid of his intentions.

The man said: Don’t be afraid, my beautiful boy!

If you want, you can be also on the top!

If you are afraid of me, you should know that I am a

mokhannas [a passivehomosexual],

So sit on me and ride me as if I was a camel!

Reference:

Floor, Willem, A Social History of Sexual
Relations in Iran, Mage Publishers, Washington 2008